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CARNEGIE  LIBRARY  OF  PITTSBURGH 


RULES    FOR    FILING    CARDS 

IN  THE  DICTIONARY  CATALOGUES  OF 

THE  CARNEGIE  LIBRARY  OF 

PITTSBURGH 


SECOND  EDITION 


PITTSBURGH 

CARNEGIE  LIBRARY 

1917 


<^ 


A*^ 


Preface  to  the  Second  Edition 

The  following"  rules,  based  on  those  found  in  ihc  fourth 
edition  of  Cutter's  "Rules  for  ,a  dictionary  catalogue,"  have 
been  compiled  for  the  use  of  assistants  in  the  Carnegie  Library 
of  Pittsburgh.  They  apply  to  the  filing  of  printed  cards,  the 
form  used  in  all  the  card  catalogues  of  this  Library. 

No  attempt  has  been  made  to  set  forth  or  defend  any  rules 
of  entry  followed  in  cataloguing;  these  rules  for  arrangement 
presuppose  the  acceptance  of  certain  catalogue  entries  which  are 
followed  in  this  Library.  Rules  which  do  not  necessitate  any 
deviation  from  the  strictly  alphabetical  order  are  not  given. 
For  example,  no  statement  is  made  about  the  filing  of  names 
differing  but  slightly  in  spelling,  as  Green  and  Greene,  Brown 
and  Browne,  etc.,  because  they  are  filed  alphabetically  in  two 
files  as  spelled.  Some  aids  have  been  incorporated  to  guide  the 
untrained  assistant,  such  as  the  entries  for  articles  in  foreign 
languages.  The  alphabetical  rather  than  the  logical  arrange- 
ment has  been  adopted  to  facilitate  quick  reference. 

Very  few  changes  have  been  made  in  this  edition,  the  onh- 
one  of  importance  being  under  "New  York,"  on  pages  24 
and  25. 

The  rules  represent  the  practice  followed  by  the  Catalogue 
Department  and  were  compiled  for  publication  by  Margaret 
Mann,  Chief  Cataloguer. 

Harrison  VV.  Craver, 

January  26,  191 7.  Librarian. 


357473 


Rules  for  Filing  Cards 

Abbreviations. 

Arrange  abbreviations  as  if  spelled  in  full  (except  Mr  and  Mrs),  and 
elisions  as  if  one  word. 

Example 
ABC  of  swimming. 
American  Iron  and  Steel  Association. 
American  Jewish  Historical  Society. 
American  Library  Association. 
A.  L.  A.  booklist. 
A.  L.  A.  catalog. 
American  Library  Institute. 
Art  de  linguistique. 
Art  de  I'instruction. 
Art  d'economiser. 
Art  des  mines. 
Art  d'etre  grandpere. 
Art  digne. 
Art  d'instruire. 
Dr  Latimer. 
Doctor  Luke. 
Dr  North. 
Mozart,  W.  A. 
Mr  Dooley. 
Mrs  Tree. 

Much  ado  about  nothing. 
Who  goes  there? 
\yho'd  be  king? 
Who's  who. 
Whose  home  is  the  wildefness. 

Arrange  proper  names  beginning  with  M',  Mc,  St.,  Ste.  as  if  spelled 
Mac,  Saint,  Sainte. 

Example 

Maclaren,  J.  M.  Saint  Pierre,  J.  H.  Bernardin  de. 

M'Laren,  J.  T.  St.  Vincent,  J.  J. 

McLaren,  L.  L.  Ste.  Anne  des  Monts. 

M'Laren,  R.  S.  Sainte-Beuve,  C.  A. 
MacLaren,  W.  W. 


V 


6  CARNEGIE  LIBRARY  OF  PITTSBURGH 

Added  entry.     See  Author  arrangement. — Place   (country,  state,  city). 

Ampersand. 

Character  "&"  is  alphabeted  as  "and,"  "et,"  "uiul,"  etc.,  according  to 
the  language  used. 

Example 

Art  &  craftsmanship. 
Art  &  artistes  au  i8e  siecle. 
Berlin  &  the  German  empire. 
Berlin  &  seine  bauten. 

Analytical  entries. 

Author.  File  by  author  and  title  underscored  in  contents,  disregard- 
ing author  and  title  of  the  main  book. 

Subject.  File  first  by  subject  at  top  of  card,  second  by  author  of 
analytical  underscored  in  contents  and  third  by  title  of  analytical.  If 
there  is  no  author  in  contents  file  by  the  author  of  the  main  book. 


Sample  cards 

Donnay,  Maurice. 

Clark,  Barrett  Harper,  ed.  842  C51 

Three  modern  plays  from  the  French,  with  a  preface  by  Clayton 
Hamilton.     1914.     Holt. 

Contents:  The  prince  d'Aurec,  by  Henri  Lavedan. — The  pardon,  by  Jules  Lemaitre. 
— The  other  danger,  by  Maurice  Donnay. 

England.    History.    Norman  period. 

Oman,  Charles  William  Chadwick,  ed.  942  024h 

History  of  England,     v. 2,  4-5.     1904-05.     Methuen. 

V.2.     England  under  the  Normans  and  Angcvins,  1 066-1 272,  by  H.  W.  C.  l3avis. 

V.4.     England  under  the  Tudors,  by  A.  D.  Innes. 
V.5.     England  under  the  Stuarts,  by  G.  M.  Trevelyan. 

China.    Politics  and  government. 

Johnson,  Samuel,  1822-82.  299  J36 

Oriental   religions  and   their  relation   to  universal   religion;    China. 

1877. 

Contents:  Elements:  The  Chinese  mind. — Labor. — Science. — External  relations. — 
Ethnic  type. — Resources. — Structures:  Education. — Government. — Language. —  Litera- 
ture.—History. — Poetry. — Sages:  Rationalism. — Confucius. — Doctrine  of  Confucius. — 
Influence  of  Confucius. — Mencius. —  Beliefs:  Foundations. —  Buddhism. —  Missionary 
failures  and  fruits. — Tao-ism. — -Philosophy. 

"Fung-shui,"  p. 715-717- 

Apostrophe.    See  Punctuation  marks. 


RULES  FOR  FILING  CARDS  7 

Articles. 

Disregard  article  at  the  beginning  of  an  entry,  but  consider  if  not 
the  first  word. 


Example 


The  man  of  his  time. 
Man  of  mark. 
A  man  of  the  age. 
Man  of  the  world. 
The  man  of  yesterday. 

Un  homme  d'affaires. 
L'homme  de  neige. 
Homme  du  peuple. 
L'homme  qui  rit. 


Frau  Holde. 
Die  Frau  Marchesa. 
Frau  Sorge. 
Eine  frau  wie  du. 
Frau  Wilhelmine. 


Articles  in  foreign  languages 

Danish  or  Norwegian. 

Plural 


Singular 
II.  common 

den  det 

en  et 


de  [di] 


the 
a 


Dutch. 


Singular 

Plural 

m. 

f. 

n. 

iiom. 

de 

de 

het,  't 

de 

gen. 

des 

der 

des 

der 

dat. 

den 

der  or  de 

het 

den 

ace. 

den 

de 

het,  't 

de 

m. 

f. 

n. 

notii. 

een 

eene 

een 

gen. 

eens 

eener 

eens 

dat. 

eenen  ot 

een     eener  or  eene 

eenen  or  een 

ace. 

eenen  or  een     eene 

een 

the 


French. 


Singular 


Plural 


Before  vowel 

m. 

/. 

m 

&-f. 

m.  &■  f. 

num. 

le 

la 

V 

les 

gen. 

du 

dela 

del' 

des 

dat. 

au 

a  la 

al' 

aux 

ace. 

le 
un 

la 
une 

1' 

les 

the 


8 


CARNEGIE  LIBRARY  OF  PITTSBURGH 


Articles  in  foreign  languages — continued. 
German. 


Singular 

m. 

f. 

nom. 

der 

die 

gen. 

des 

der 

dot. 

dem 

der 

ace. 

den 

die 

nom. 

ein 

eine 

gen. 

eines 

einer 

dat. 

einem 

einer 

ace. 

einen 

eine 

Hungarian. 

a,  az 

the 

egy 

a 

n. 

das 
des 
dem 
das 

ein 
eines 
einem 
ein 


Plural 
m.  f.  n. 
die 
der 
den 
die 


the 


Italian. 


Singular 

Before  vowels 

m. 

m. 

f. 

m.  &  f. 

nom. 

ace. 

il 

.  lo' 

la 

V 

gen. 

del 

dello 

della 

deir 

-     th 

dat. 

al 

alio 

alia 

air 

abl 

dal 

dallo 
Plural 

dalla 

dair 

Before  vow 

els 

»(. 

ni. 

f. 

m. 

f. 

nom. 

ace. 

i 

gli 

le 

gli^ 

le 

gen. 

del 

degli 

delle 

degli 

delle 

dat. 

ai 

agli 

alle 

agli 

alle 

abl. 

dai 

dagli 

dalle 

dagli 

dalle 

Y  the 


'  lo  is  used  before  5  followed  by  another  consonant;  also  before  3. 

-  The  !  of  gli  is  elided  only  when  the  following  word  begins  with  an   /. 


m. 

f. 

no>n 

.  ace. 

un 

una 

gen. 

d'un 

d'una 

dat. 

ad  un 

ad  una 

abl. 

da  un 

da  una 

Latin. 

No 

articl 

es. 

Lithuanian. 

No 

articl 

es. 

Norwegian.     See  Danish  or  Norwegian. 


RULES  FOR  FILING  CARDS 
Articles  in  foreign  languages — continued. 


Polish. 

No  articles. 

Portuguese. 

Singular 

Plural 

f. 

m.                f. 

o                 a 

OS                as 

the 

um              uma 

a 

Spanish. 


Singular 

in. 

f. 

n. 

noni. 

el 

la 

lo 

gen. 

del 

de  la 

de  lo 

dat. 

al,  para 

el 

a  la,  para 

la 

a lo,  para  lo 

ace. 

el,  al 

la,  a  la 

lo,  a  lo 

Plural 
m.  f. 


y     the 


Neuter  has  no  plural 


iioin. 

los 

las 

gen. 
dat. 

de  los 

a los,  para los 

de  las 

a  las,  para  las 

-     the 

ace. 

los,  a  los 

las,  a  las 

un 

una 

a 

Swedish 

)n.  &  f. 
den 

Singular 

n. 
det 

Plural 
de 

the 

en 

ett 

a 

Associations.    Sec  Place,  compound  names  of  places,  subjects,  societies, 
institutions. — Place  (country,  state,  city). 

y        Author  arrangement. 

1.  Author  as  main  entry. 

2.  Author  as  secondary  entry. 

3.  Works  about  an  author. 

I.     Author  as  main  entry. 

Arrange  in  one  alphabet  works  either  written,  compiled,  edited, 
translated,  or  written  jointly  with  another.  Author  of  analytic,  under- 
lined in  note  or  contents,  should  be  filed  in  its  alphabetical  place  in  the 
above  group,  arranged  by  the  title  of  the  analytic  rather  than  the  title 
of  the  book.  In  case  title  of  separate  work  and  of  analytic  are  the 
same,  file  separate  work  first. 

See  also  Analytical  entries. 


10  CARNEGIE  LIBRARY  OF  PITTSBURGH 

Author  arrangement — continued. 

2.  Author  as  secondary  entry. 

Arrange  in  one  alphabet,  after  all  authors  as  main  entry,  all  second- 
ary author  entries.  These  include  added  entries  under  compiler,  editor, 
translator,  illustrator,  publisher.  Arrange  these  secondarily  by  the 
main  author  of  the  book,  not  by  title. 

3.  Works  about  an  author. 

Arrange  in  one  alphabet,  after  all  secondary  entries,  the  works 
about  an  author.  Arrange  these  secondarily  by  the  author  of  the  book; 
if  an  analytical  entry,  arrange  secondarily  by  author  of  the  analytic. 
Anonymous  works  about  an  author  file  secondarily  under  the  title  of 
the  work. 

Example 

1.  Lang,  Andrew. 

Ballads  of  books. 
Lang,  Andrew,  and  others. 

A  batch  of  golfing  papers. 
Lang,  Andrew,  comp. 

Blue  poetry  book. 
Lang,  Andrew. 

Complete  works. 
Lang,  Andrew,  &  Lang,  John. 

Highways  and  byways  in  the  Border. 
Lang,  Andrew. 

Marett,  R.  R.  ed. 

Anthropology  and  the  classics. 

Contents:     Homer  and  anthropology,  by  Andrew  Lang. 

Lang,  Andrew. 

Homer  and  the  epic. 
Lang,  Andrew,  &  Mason,  A.  E;  W. 

Mason,  Alfred  Edward  Woodley,  &  Lang,  Andrew. 
Parson  Kelly. 
Lang,  Andrew,  ed. 

Red  fairy  book. 

2.  Lang,  Andrew,  tr. 

Homer. 

Iliad;  tr.  by  Andrew  Lang. 
Lang,  Andrew,  and  others,  tr. 
Homer. 

Odyssey;  tr.  by  Andrew  Lang. 
Lang,  Andrew,  ed. 

Lang,  Mrs  Leonora  Blanche. 
Book  of  saints  and  heroes. 


RULES  FOR  FILING  CARDS  n 

Author  arrangement — continued. 

3.    Lang,  Andrew. 
Gosse,  E.  W. 
Andrew  Lang. 
Lang,  Andrew. 
James,  Henry. 

Lang;  a  biography. 
Lang,  Andrew. 
Lang,  Andrew. 
Letters. 
Lang,  Andrew. 

Matthews,  Brander. 
Aspects  of  fiction. 

Contents:     American  literature. — The  penalty  of  humor. 
— Two  Scotsmen  of  letters;  Andrew  Lang,  R.  L.  Stevenson. 

See  also  Bible. — Homer. — Periodicals. — Place   (country,  state,  city). 
— Shakespeare,  William. — Wagner,  Richard. 

Bible.    Arrange  as  follows: 
I.    Whole  Bible. 

1.  Bible  treated  as  author,  i.  e.  text. 

a.  English  text. 

Arrange  alphabetically  by  title. 

b.  Foreign  texts. 

Arrange  alphabetically  by  name  of  language. 

2.  Bible  treated  as  subject,  i.  e.  works  about  the  Bible. 

Arrange   alphabetically  under   the   various   subdivisions. 

Example 

Bible.     Whole.     Antiquities. 

Bible.     Whole.     Authority,  inspiration,  criticism. 
Bible.     Whole.     Bibliography. 
Bible.     Whole.     Biography. 
II.    Old  testament. 

I  and  2  arrange  as  in  whole  Bibl6. 

3.  Collections  of  single  books.     (Except  4  and  6.) 

4.  Hexateuch,  Pentateuch,  etc. 

Arrange  according  to  number  of  books  included,  the  col- 
lection containing  the  largest  number  coming  first. 

5.  Single  books,  arranged  in  the  order  of  the  English  version, 

illustrative  works  on  each  book  following  the  editions  of 
the  text  of  that  book. 

6.  Collections  of  the   prophetical  books  follow  the   Song  of 

Solomon. 

7.  Apocrypha. 

8.  Pseudepigrapha. 
III.    New  testament. 

I  and  2  arrange  as  in  whole  Bible. 


12  CARNEGIE  LIBRARY  OF  PITTSBURGH 

Bible — continued. 


3- 

4- 
5- 
6. 

7- 


Collections  of  single  books.    (Except  Gospels  and  Epistles.) 

Gospels. 

Single  books,  arranged  as  in  Old  testament. 

Collections  of  the  Epistles  follow  the  Acts. 

Apocrypha. 


Arrangement  of  books  of  the  Old  testament. 


Genesis. 

Exodus. 

Leviticus. 

Numbers. 

Deuteronomy. 

Joshua. 

Judges. 

Ruth. 

Samuel. 

Kings. 

Chronicles. 

Ezra. 

Nehemiah. 


Esther. 

Job. 

Psalms. 

Proverbs. 

Ecclesiastes. 

Song  of  Solomon. 

Isaiah. 

Jeremiah. 

Lamentations. 

Ezekiel. 

Daniel. 

Hosea. 

Joel. 


Ainos. 

Obadiah. 

Jonah. 

Micah. 

Nahum. 

Habakkuk. 

Zephaniah. 

Haggai. 

Zechariah. 

Malachi. 

Apocrypha. 

Pseudepigrapha. 


Arrangement  of  books  of  the  New  testament. 


Matthew. 

Mark. 

Luke. 

John. 

Acts. 

Romans. 

Corinthians. 

Galatians. 


Ephesians. 

Philippians. 

Colossians. 

Thessalonians. 

Timothy. 

Titus. 

Philemon. 


Hebrews. 

James. 

Peter. 

John,  Epistles. 

Jude. 

Revelation. 

Apocrypha. 


Business  firms.    See  Firms. 

Charters  (as  subhead).    See  Place  (country,  state,  city). 

Chronological  arrangement.     See  Congresses. — History. — Maps. — Per- 
sonal names,  forenames  and  surnames  the  same. 

City.    See  Geographical  names. — Place  (country,  state,  city). 

Classical  names.    See  Personal  names,  Greek  and  Latin. 

Compiler.    See  Author  arrangement. 

Compound  forenames.    See  Forenames. 

Compound  names  of  places,  subjects,  societies,  institutions.    See  Place, 
compoimd  names  of  places,  subjects,  societies,  institutions. 

Compound  personal  names.     See  Personal  names,  compounded  of  two 
names. — Personal  names  with  prefix. 


RULES  FOR  FILING  CARDS  13 

Compound  words.     See  Hyphened  words. — Place,  compound  names  of 
places,  subjects,  etc. 

Conferences.     See  Congresses. 

Congresses. 

When  congresses  and  conferences  are  distinguished  by  number  or 
date,  arrange  by  number  or  date,  not  alphabetically. 


Example 

International  Congress  of  Applied  Chemistry   (7th),  Lon- 
don, 1909. 

International  Congress  of  Applied  Chemistry  (8th),  Wash- 
ington and  New  York,  1912. 

Constitution  (as  subhead).    See  Place  (country,  state,  city). 

Corporate  entry.     See  Place,  compound  names  of  places,  subjects,  so- 
cieties, institutions. — Place  (country,  state,  city). 

Country.     See  Place  (country,  state,  city). 

County.    See  Geographical  names. 

Dates.    See  Numerals. 

Directories  (as  subhead).    See  Place  (country,  state,  city). 

Edition.    See  Title. 

Editor.    See  Author  arrangement. 

Elisions.    See  Abbreviations. 

Family  names.    See  Personal  names  compounded  of  two  names. 

Figures.    See  Numerals. 

Firms. 

When  a  publisher  or  a  firm  name  is  same  as  personal  name,  file  by 
forename  in  its  alphabetic  place  among -the  personal  names.  If  firm 
name  has  no  forename  file  after  personal  names. 

Exatnple 

Jones,  J.  C. 

Jones  (L.  M.)  &  Son,  N.  Y. 

Jones,  R.  B. 

Jones  (Robert)  Company,  Philadelphia. 

Jones,  Robert  Henry. 

Jones  &  Laughlin  Steel  Co.  Pittsburgh. 

Jones,  Miller  and  Co.  N.  Y. 

Jones,  Smith  and  Brown,  Boston. 


V 


14  CARNEGIE  LIBRARY  OF  PITTSBURGH 

Foreign  titles.    See  Translations. 

Forenames. 

Forenames  used  as  headings  precede  surnames. 


Example 
Christian  II. 
Christian,  James. 
The  Christian.     Caine,  Hall. 
Christian  art. 


Headings  like  Charles,  George,  Henry,  etc.,  arrange  in  the  follow- 
ing groups: 


Saints. 

Popes. 

Sovereigns. 

Princes  and  nobility. 

Others. 


The  saints  are  arranged  secondarily  by  their  usual  appellatives,  the 
popes  by  their  number.  Sovereigns  in  alphabetic  order  of  countries  and 
under  countries  numerically.  Other  persons  are  arranged  secondarily 
by  their  usual  appellatives. 


Example 


John,  St. 

John  of  Damascus,  St. 
John  X,  pope. 
John  XXI,  pope. 
John,  king  of  England. 
John  V,  king  of  Portugal. 
John  III,  king  of  Sweden. 
John  of  Austria,  prince. 
John  IV,  duke  of  Bretagne. 


John,  duke  of  Burgundy. 

John  of  Gaunt,  duke  of  Lancaster. 

John  of  Fordun. 

John  of  Parma. 

John  of  Salisbury,  hp. 

John,  Griffith. 

John  Crerar  Library,  Chicago. 

John  Halifax,  gentleman. 


Note  that  emperors  are  not  to  be  separated  from  kings. 

Such  names  as  Frederick  William,  Ernest  August  Charles,  Char- 
lotte Augusta,  Marie  Antoinette,  may  be  regarded  as  compound  fore- 
names. They  should  be  arranged  in  the  above  groups,  the  compounds 
of  each  group  following  the  single  names. 


See  also  Personal  names,  forenames  and  surnames  the  same. 


/ 


RULES  FOR  FILING  CARDS  15 

Geographical  names. 

When  the  same  word  serves  for  several  kinds  of  heading  the  order 
is:    person,  place,  subject,  title. 


Exajnple 

Buffalo,  N.  Y. 

Buffalo  (animal). 

Buffalo  Bill's  wild  West  show. 

Washington,  George. 

Washington  (state). 

Washington,  D.  C. 

Washington,  Pa. 

Washington  Adams  in  England. 

Washington  county,  Pa. 

Washington  Literary  Society. 

When  states  and  cities  have  the  same  name  arrange  first  state  (of- 
ficial followed  by  non-official  entries),  second  city  (official  followed 
by  non-official  entries). 

County  of  the  same  name  is  filed  in  its  alphabetical  place  and  the 
word  county  is  considered  in  alphabeting.  The  filing  of  New  York 
county  is  an  exception  to  this.  For  its  arrangement  see  example  under 
Place  (country,  state,  city). 


Example 

Washington  (state) — Geological  survey. 

Washington,  D.  C. 

Washington   (D.  C.)   Playground  Association. 

Washington,  Pa. 

Washington  and  Jefferson  College. 

Washington  College. 

Washington  county.  Ohio. 

Washington  county.  Pa. 

Washington  in  Lincoln's  time. 

Washington  national  monument. 

Washington  (state)  University. 

See  also  Place,  compound  names  of  places,  subjects,  etc. — Place 
(country,  state,  city). — Subject  (as  subhead). 

Government  entries.    See  Place  (country,  state,  city). 

Greek  names.    See  Personal  names,  Greek  and  Latin. 


i6  CARNEGIE  LIBRARY  OF  PITTSBURGH 

History. 

When  the  history  of  a  country  is  subdivided  by  periods  or  events, 
these  subdivisions  are  arranged  chronologically,  not  alphabetically. 

Example 

U.  S.  History.  Colonial  period. 

U.  S.  History.  Revolution. 

U.  S.  History.  War  of  1812. 

U.  S.  History.  Civil  war. 

U.  S.  History.  Reconstruction  period. 

The  Revolution  and  the  Civil  war  are  subjects  which  include  so 
much  material  that  they  have  been  subdivided.  The  subdivisions  are 
arranged  alphabetically. 

Example 


U.S. 

History. 

Civil  war. 

Bibliography. 

U.S. 

History. 

Civil  war. 

Biography. 

U.S. 

History. 

Civil  war. 

Campaigns  and  battles 

U.S. 

History. 

Civil  war. 

Finance. 

U.  S.     History.     Civil  war.     Poetry. 

Homer. 

Arrange  entries  in  the  following  order: 

1.  Collected  works  arranged  alphabetically  by  title. 

2.  Commentaries   and   criticisms   on   collected   works   arranged 

alphabetically  by  author. 

3.  Dictionaries  and  concordances. 

4.  Separate   works   in   one   alphabet  arranged   by   title.      Under 

each  work  arrange  first  the  texts,  then  books  about  it,  ar- 
ranged secondarily  by  author  of  book. 

5.  Homer  for  children. 

Example 

1.  Homer. 

Opera  Grjeco-Latina. 
Homer. 
Works. 

2.  Homer. 

Gierke,  A.  M. 

Familiar  studies  in  Homer. 
Homer. 

Lawton,  W.  C. 

Art  and  humanity  in  Homer. 


RULES  FOR  FILING  CARDS  17 

Homer — continued. 

3.  Homer. 

Autenrieth,  Georg,  ed. 

Homeric  dictionary. 
Homer. 

Ebeling,  Heinrich,  ed. 

Lexicon  Homericum. 

4.  Homer. 

Battle  of  the  frogs  and  mice  (text). 
Homer. 

Battle  of  the  frogs  and  mice  (criticism). 
Homer. 

Hymns  (text). 
Homer. 

Hymns  (criticism). 
Homer. 

Iliad  (text). 
Homer. 

Iliad  (criticism). 
Homer. 

Odyssey  (text). 
Homer. 

Odyssey  (criticism). 

5.  Homer. 

Brooks,  Edward. 

Story  of  the  Iliad. 
Homer. 

Church,  A.  J. 

Stories  from  Homer. 

Hyphened  words. 

Arrange  as  if  separate  words,  disregarding  hyphen. 

Example 

Happy  home. 

Happy-Thought  Hall. 

Happy  thoughts. 
But  file  as  one  word  the  following: 

Anti-Christ. 

Bi-centennial. 

Con-tect  (weekly). 

Co-operative. 

Pre-historic. 

Pre-Raphaelite. 

To-day. 
See  also  Place,  compound  names  of  places,  subjects,  etc. 


i8  CARNEGIE  LIBRARY  OF  PITTSBURGH 

Illustrator.    See  Author  arrangement. 

Initial  articles.    See  Articles. 

Initials. 

Arrange  all  entries  beginning  with  initials  only  before  those  begin- 
ning with  full  words  of  same  initial  letter.  File  initials  standing  for  the 
name  of  a  person  before  those  beginning  a  title. 

Example 
T.,  H. 
T.,J. 
T.,  L.  G. 
T.,  V. 

T.  R.  in  cartoons. 
T.  Square  Club. 
T.  Tembarom. 
Tabb,  John  Banister. 
Table  talk. 

See  also  Abbreviations. 

Institutions.    Sec  Place,  compound  names  of  places,  subjects,  societies, 
institutions. — Place  (country,  state,  city). 

International  congresses.     See  Congresses. 

Inverted  subject  heading.    See  Subject  (as  subhead). 

Joint  author. 

File  with  other  works  by  the  first  author,  disregarding  the  name 
of  the  second  author. 

Sec  examples  under  Author  arrangement. 

Latin  names.     See  Personal  names,  Greek  and  Latin. 

Mc,  Mac.    See  Abbreviations. 

Main  entry.    Sec  Author  arrangement. 

Maps. 

Arrange  alphabetically  by  name  of  place.  If  there  be  more  than 
one  entry  under  a  place  arrange  chronologically. 

Example 

Maps — Paris. 

Maps — Pennsylvania. 
Maps — Pennsylvania.     (1884.) 
Maps — Pennsylvania.     (1885.) 
Maps — South  America. 


RULES  FOR  FILING  CARDS  .  19 

Mr  and  Mrs.    Sec  Abbreviations.— Personal  names,  titles  of  honor  and 
distinction. 

Music. 

Arrange  in  two  files. 

1.  Books  about  music. 

2.  Musical  scores. 


Examples  of  headings  and  subheadings  for  musical  scores 


Music. 

Chamb 

er  music. 

Music. 

Chambi 

er  music.     Quartets. 

Strings 

Music. 

Chamb 

er  music.     Quintets. 

Music. 

Piano. 

Music. 

Piano. 

Concertos. 

Music. 

Piano. 

Duets. 

Music. 

Piano. 

Mazurkas. 

Music. 

Piano. 

Sonatas. 

New  York.     See  Place  (country,  state,  city). 

Noblemen.    See  Forenames. 

Numerals. 

Arrange  titles  beginning  with  numerals  as  if  the  figures  were  writ- 
ten out  in  the  language  of  the  rest  of  the  title. 

Example 

Nineteenth  army  corps.  Achtspannig. 

19th  century  almanac.  1813;  kriegsbild. 

Nineteenth  century  prose.  Acids. 

Arrange  numerals  in  English,  100,  1,000,  100,000  S^s  if  spelled  out, 
one  hundred,  one  thousand,  one  hundred  thousand;  not  a  hundred,  a 
thousand,  a  hundred  thousand.  Such  numbers  over  1,000,  as  1,500, 
2,300,  1,000,000,  arrange  as  if  spelled  out,  one  thousand  five  hundred, 
two  thousand  three  hundred,  one  million;  not  fifteen  hundred,  twenty- 
three  hundred,  ten  hundred  thousand. 

English  and  German  numerals  indicating  years  form  an  exception 
to  this,  and  1800,  1900,  etc.  are  arranged  as  if  spelled  eighteen  hundred, 
nineteen  hundred,  achtzehn  hundert,  neunzehn  hundert,  but  correspond- 
ing French  numerals  are  arranged  as  if  beginning  with  mil,  thus  1812  is 
arranged  as  if  spelled  mil  huit  cent  douze. 

Official  publications.     See  Place  (country,  state,  city). 

Order  of  entries.    See  Person,  place,  subject,  title,  having  the  same  name. 

Ordinances  (as  subhead).    See  Place  (country,  state,  city). 


20  CARNEGIE  LIBRARY  OF  PITTSBURGH 

Periodicals. 

When  a  periodical  is  used  as  an  author,  always  file  after  entry  for 
periodical  itself. 

Example 

Review  of  reviews;  monthly. 
Review  of  reviews. 

Annual  index  of  periodicals  and  photographs. 
Review  of  reviews. 

Pittsburg;  a  new  great  city. 

V  Person,  place,  subject,  title,  having  the  same  name. 

When  the  same  word  serves  for  several  kinds  of  heading  the  order 
is:   person,  place,  subject,  title. 

Example 

Buffalo,  N.  Y. 

Buffalo  (animal). 

Buffalo  Bill's  wild  West  show. 

Washington,  George. 

Washington  (state). 

Washington,  D.  C. 

Washington,  Pa. 

Washington  Adams  in  England. 

Washington  county,  Pa. 

Washington  Literary  Society. 

Washington  (state)  University.   - 

\/         Personal  names  compounded  of  two  names. 

Arrange  personal  names  compounded  of  two  names,  with  or  with- 
out a  hyphen,  after  the  first  name  but  before  the  next  longer  word; 
all  author  names  file  before  all  subjects  or  titles  beginning  with  the 
same  name.  Surnames  with  "family,"  "dynasty"  or  "house"  should 
follow  plain  surname  and  not  be  mixed  with  compound  names  or  titles 
beginning  with  surname. 

Example 

Wood,  William  Wallace.  Lloyd,  William. 

Wood  family.  Lloyd  family. 

Wood-Jones,  Frederic.  Lloyd  Brothers,  Cincinnati. 

Woodberry,  George  Edward.         Lloyd  George,  David. 

Lloyd  George  family. 

Lloyd-Williams,  Richard. 

Lloyd  guide  to  Australasia. 

Lloyd  Library. 


RULES  FOR  FILING  CARDS  21 

V        Personal  names,  forenames  and  surnames  the  same. 

When  surnames  and  forenames  are  the  same  arrange  chronologi- 
cally if  dates  are  given.  Names  without  dates  precede  those  with  dates. 
If  there  are  several  they  may  be  filed  by  epithet  or  title  of  honor,  such 
as  Capt.,  Rev.,  Sir. 

Example 
Scott,  Walter,  M.  A. 
Scott,  Sir  Walter. 
Scott,  Walter,  1854-96. 
Scott,  Walter,  b.  1876. 

V         Personal  names,  Greek  and  Latin. 

Arrange  Greek  and  Latin  personal  names  by  their  patronymics  or 
other  appellatives. 

Example 
Dionysius. 

Dionysius  Areopagita. 
Dionysius  Chalcidensis. 
Dionysius  Genuensis. 

Personal  names,  titles  of  honor  and  distinction. 

Pay  no  attention  to  prefixes  as  Mrs,  Sir,  Lady,  etc.,  or  to  suffixes, 
as  bp.,  graf,  comte,  baron,  etc.  unless  forenames  are  the  same,  in  which 
case  use  to  distinguish.  If  there  is  no  forename,  but  only  a  title  or  such 
term  as  Mother,  Uncle,  Professor,  file  before  entries  with  forenames. 

Example 
Ross,  Mother. 

Ross,  Professor.  t 

Ross,  A.  C.  * 

Ross,  M.  R. 

y'        Personal  names  with  prefix. 

A  personal  name  with  prefix  is  considered  as  one  word. 

Exaftiple 

Demonstration.  Leslie. 

Demophilus.  Le  Soudier. 

De  Morgan.  Lessing. 

Demosthenes.  Saint-Amand. 

Ducal  palaces.  .  Sainte-Beuve. 

Du  Chaillu.  Saintly  lives. 

Duchess  of  Malfi.  Tenant  of  Wildfell  hall. 

Lame  dog's  diary.  Ten  Eyck. 

La  Motte  Fouque.  Tennis. 

Lamplighter.  Vanadium. 

Van  Buren. 

Vanity  fair. 


22  CARNEGIE  LIBRARY  OF  PITTSBURGH 

Pittsburgh.    Sec  Place  (country,  state,  city). 

Place,  compound  names  of  places,  subjects,  societies,  institutions. 

Arrange  compound  names  of  places  and  names  of  societies  and  in- 
stitutions as  separate  words. 

Example 
New,  John. 
New  Hampshire. 
New  legion  of  Satan.     (Title.) 
New  Sydenham  Society. 
New  thought. 
Newark. 
Newfoundland. 
Newspapers. 

1/  But  arrange  as  single  words  compound  words  which  are  printed  as 

one. 

Example 

Book-binding.     See  Bookbinding. 

Book-keeping. 

Book-plates. 

Bookbinding. 

Bookkeeping  for  retail  stores. 

Books  and  reading. 

Bookselling. 

Place  (country,  state,  city). 

1.  Works  by  a  country,  state  or  city  as  author. 

2.  Works  about  a  country,  state  or  city. 

3.  Associations,   institutions   or   titles   beginning  with   name   of 

country,  state  or  city. 

I.  Arrange  in  one  alphabet  works  by  a  country,  state  or  city  as 
author,  or  author  as  secondary  entry. 

In  these  entries  the  name  of  place  is  followed  by  dash  and  name  of 
government  department.  Secondary  entries  are  filed  secondarily  by 
title,  not  by  main  author  of  book. 

Exatnple 

Canada — Geological  survey. 

Annual  report. 
Canada — Geological  survey. 
Young,  G.  A. 

Descriptive  sketch  of  the  geology  of  Canada. 
Issued  by  the  Canada  geological  survey. 


RULES  FOR  FILING  CARDS  23 

Place  (country,  state,  city) — continued. 

Canada — Geological  survey. 
Guide  book. 

Canada — Geological  survey. 
Reports  of  progress. 

In  a  few  cases  the  period  is  used  instead  of  dash  after  name  of 
place  in  official  entries,  but  this  does  not  change  the  order.  These  are 
for  form  headings  such  as.  Constitution,  Statutes,  Charter,  Directories 
and  Ordinances. 

2.  Arrange  in  one  alphabet  after  works  by  a  country,  state  or  city 
all  works  about  a  country,  state  or  city.  In  these  entries  the  name  of 
the  place  is  followed  by  period  and  subdivision. 

3.  Arrange  in  one  alphabet  after  works  about  a  country,  state  or 
city  all  associations,  institutions  and  titles  beginning  with  its  name. 
Disregard  the  comma  which  often  follows  the  name  of  place  in  this 
form  of  entry. 

Country 

f 

1.  U.  S. — Chemistry  bureau. 
U.  S. — Forestry  division. 

U.  S. — Post  office  department. 

U.  S. — President. 

U.  S.     Statutes. 

U.  S._ — War  department. 

2.  U.  S.     History. 

U.  S.     Post  office.     (For  books  about  the  department.) 
U.  S.     President.      (For  books  about  the  presidents.) 

3.  U.  S.  catalog. 

U.  S.  Steel  Corporation. 

State 

1.  Pennsylvania — Agriculture,  Department  of. 
Pennsylvania.     Constitution. 
Pennsylvania — Education  commission. 
Pennsylvania — State  library. 

2.  Pennsylvania.     Description  and  travel. 
Pennsylvania.     History. 
Pennsylvania.     Militia. 

3.  Pennsylvania  farmer. 

Pennsylvania  State  Agricultural  Society. 
Pennsylvania  stories. 
Pennsylvania  University. 


24  CARNEGIE  LIBRARY  OF  PITTSBURGH 

Place  (country,  state,  city) — continued. 


1.  P 
P 
P 
P 
P 
P 
P 
P 

2.  P 

P 
P 
P 
P 


City 

ttsburgh — Assessors. 

ttsburgh.     Charter.      (As  author.) 

ttsburgh — Council. 

ttsburgh.     Directories. 

ttsburgh — Health  bureau. 

ttsburgh.     Ordinances. 

ttsburgh — Public  education  board. 

ttsburgh — Water  bureau. 

ttsburgh.  Charities. 

ttsburgh.  Charter.      (For  books  about  the  charter.) 

ttsburgh.  History. 

ttsburgh.  Municipal  improvement. 

ttsburgh.  Public  education  board  .    (For  books  about  the 

board.) 

ttsburgh.  Streets. 

ttsburgh.  Academy  of  Science  and  Art. 

ttsburgh  almanac. 

ttsburgh.  Chamber  of  Commerce. 

ttsburgh  mercury. 

ttsburgh  Survey. 

ttsburgh  the  powerful. 

ttsburgh  University. 


In  filing  cards  under  New  York,  arrange 

1.  New  York  (state). 

a.  as  author. 

b.  as  subject. 

2.  New  York  (colony). 

3.  New  York  (county). 

4.  New  York  (city). 

a.  as  author. 

b.  as  subject. 

5.  All  titles,  associations,  periodicals,  etc.  beginning  with  New 

York. 

This  includes  city  and  state  associations. 

The  word  city  or  state  when  enclosed  in  parentheses  is  to 
be  disregarded  in  filing. 


Example 

New  York  (state) — Botanist. 

New  York  (state) — Education  department. 


RULES  FOR  FILING  CARDS  25 

Place  (country,  state,  city) — continued. 

New  York  (state).     Geology. 
New  York  (state).     History. 

2.  New  York  (colony) — Council. 

3.  New  York  (county) — Court  house  board. 

4.  New  York  (city)— Health  department. 
New  York  (city) — Police  department. 
New  York  (city).     Description. 

New  York  (city).     Police  department.     (For  books  about  the 

department.) 
New  York  (city).     Poor. 

5.  New  York  architect. 

New  York  (state),  Chamber  of  Commerce. 

New  York  City  Christian  Science  Institute. 

New  York,  City  Club. 

New  York  Edison  Company. 

New  York  (city),  Merchants'  Association. 

New  York  musical  gazette. 

New  York,  Shakespeare  Society. 

New  York  Tribune. 

Sec  also  Geographical  names. 

Place  subdivisions  under  subject.     See  Subject  (as  subhead). 

Popes.     See  Forenames. 

Possessive  case.    See  Punctuation  marks. 

Prefixes.     Sec  Personal  names,  titles  of  honor  and  distinction. — Per- 
sonal names  with  prefix. 

Princes.    See  Forenames. 

)/        Pseudonyms. 

Arrange  pseudonyms  after  the  corresponding  real  name. 

Example 
Andrew,  pseud. 
Andrew,  St. 
Andrew,  St.  pseud. 
Andrew,  John. 
Andrew,  John,  pseud. 
Andrew,  John  Albion. 

Publisher.     See  Firms. 

/  Punctuation  marks. 

Disregard  punctuation  marks  and  apostrophe.     The  possessive  case 
singular  should  be  arranged  with  the  plural. 


26  CARNEGIE  LIBRARY  OF  PITTSBURGH 

Example 
Boys'  and  girls'  book. 
Boy's  book  of  rhyme. 
Boy's  Odyssey. 
Boys  of  1812. 
Boys  of  Fairport. 
Bo5^s'  own  book. 

Rulers.    See  Forenames. 

Saints.    See  Forenames. 

Same  name  used  for  several  kinds  of  heading.    See  Geographical  names. 

Secondary   entry.      Sec   Author    arrangement. — Place    (country,    state, 
city). 

"See  also"  cards. 

"See  also"  cards  follow  entry  of  same  heading. 

Example 

Children. 

Children.  See  also. 

Children.  Care  and  training. 

Children.  Care  and  training.     See  also. 

Series. 

When  a  series  entry  consists  of  an  author  and  title,  arrange  with 
other  works  by  the  same  author  as  main  entry,  and  arrange  secondarily 
by  the  author  of  the  individual  book  in  the  series.  In  case  of  num- 
bered monograph  series,  arrange  numerically. 


Example 


Minnesota  University. 
Alumni  record. 


Minnesota  University.     Current  problems.     (Series.) 

Minnesota  University. 
President's  report. 

Minnesota  University. 

Studies  in  the  physical  sciences  and  mathematics.     (Series.) 

Minnesota  University. 

Vocations  open  to  women. 

Shakespeare. 

Arrange  entries  in  the  following  order: 

I.     Collected  works  in  one  alphabet. 


RULES  FOR  FILING  CARDS  .        27 

Shakespeare — continued. 

2.  Separate  plays  in  one  alphabet,  arranged  by  name  of  play. 
Under  each  play  arrange  first  the  texts  of  the  play,  then  works  about 
the  play,  arranged  secondarily  by  author  of  book.  The  poems  of 
Shakespeare  file  after  the  separate  plays  and  before  works  about 
Shakespeare. 

3.     Works  about   Shakespeare  and   the  plays   in  general  arranged 
alphabetically  under  subheadings. 

Example 

1.  Shakespeare,  William. 

Complete  works. 
Shakespeare,  William. 

Dramatische  werke. 
Shakespeare,  William. 

Works. 

2.  Shakespeare,  William. 

As  you  like  it  (text). 

Shakespeare,  William. 

As  you  like  it  (criticism). 

Shakespeare,  William. 
Hamlet  (text). 

Shakespeare,  William. 
Hamlet  (criticism). 

Shakespeare,  William. 

Winter's  tale   (text). 
Shakespeare,  William. 

Winter's  tale  (criticism). 

Shakespeare,  William. 

Poeins. 
Shakespeare,  William. 

Sonnets. 
Shakespeare,  William. 

Venus  and  Adonis. 

3.  Shakespeare,  William.  Biography. 
Shakespeare,  William.  Costume  of  the  characters. 
Shakespeare,  William.  Criticism. 
Shakespeare,  William.  Music. 

Shakespeare,  William.  Plots. 

Shakespeare,  William.  Sources. 

Shakespeare,  William.  Stories  of  the  plays. 

Shakespeare,  William.  Wit  and  humor. 


28  CARNEGIE  LIBRARY  OF  PITTSBURGH 

Societies.  Sec  Place,  compound  names  of  places,  subjects,  societies, 
institutions. — Place  (countrj',  state,  city). 

State.    Sec  Geographical  names. — Place  (country,  state,  city). 

Statutes  (as  subhead).    See  Place  (country,  state,  city). 

Subject.  Sec  Author  arrangement.  Works  about  an  author. — History. 
— Maps. — Music. — Person,  place,  subject,  title,  having  the  same 
name. — Place,  compound  names  of  places,  subjects,  societies,  in- 
stitutions.— Shakespeare.  n 

Subject  (as  subhead). 

Arrange  subheads  of  any  subject  alphabetically  under  subject.  When 
a  subject  has  country  or  place  subdivisions  do  not  mix  with  other  sul)- 
heads  but  file  in  a  second  group  after  them. 


Example 

Railroads. 

Railroads.  Bibliography. 

Railroads.  Construction. 

Railroads.  Laws. 

Railroads.  Periodicals. 

Railroads.  Relation  to  the  state. 

After  guide  marked  "Special  localities"  file  by  place. 

Railroads.  England. 

Railroads.  Iowa. 

Railroads.  New  York  (state). 

Railroads.  New  York  (city). 

Railroads.  Russia. 

Railroads.  United  States. 

File  subheads  separated  from  subject  by  comma   in   one   file   with 
those  separated  by  period. 


Example 


Ethics.     Dictionaries. 
Ethics,  Family. 
Ethics,  Practical. 
Ethics,  Social. 
Ethics.     Societies. 
Ethics,  State. 


RULES  FOR  FILING  CARDS  29 

Notice  that  Painting,  Mechanical  is  not  a  subhead  of  Painting,  but 
a  separate  subject. 

Surnames.    See  Personal  names,  forenames  and  surnames. 

V      Title. 

The  arrangement  of  title  entries  is  first  by  the  heading  words;  if 
they  are  the  same,  then  by  the  next  word;  if  that  is  the  same,  by  the 
next;  and  so  on.  Every  word,  article  (except  initial  article),  and  prepo- 
sition included,  is  to  be  regarded. 

Example 

Uncovenanted  mercies. 

Under  a  cloud. 

Under  the  ban. 

Under  the  greenwood  tree;  a  novel. 

Under  the  greenwood  tree;  a  poem. 

Under  which  king. 

The  undone  task. 

The  undone  task  done. 

If  two  or  more  titles  under  an  author's  name  are  the  same,  dis- 
tinguish by  edition  or  date.  If  they  are  the  same  to  the  first  semicolon, 
distinguish  by  what  follows. 

Example 

Thorndyke,  E.  L. 

Educational  psychology.     1903- 

Thorndyke,  E.  L. 

Educational  psychology.     3v.     1913-14. 

Rocheleau,  W.  F. 

Great  American  industries;  minerals. 

Rocheleau,  W.  F. 

Great  American  industries;  products  of  the  soil. 

Rocheleau,  W.  F. 

Great  American  industries;  transportation. 

Stories  by  foreign  authors;  German. 

Stories  by  foreign  authors;  Italian. 

Stories  by  foreign  authors;  Scandinavian. 

See  also  Abbreviations.— Ampersand.— Articles.— Author  arrange- 
ment.—Hyphened  words.— Initials.— Numerical  figures.— Person,  place, 
subject,  title,  having  the  same  name.— Place  (country,  state,  city).— 
Punctuation  marks. — Translations. 


.X 


30  CARNEGIE  LIBRARY  OF  PITTSBURGH 

Titles  of  honor.    Sec  Personal  names,  titles  of  honor  and  distinction. 

Translations. 

Translations  and  originals  are  not  kept  together,  but  each  transla- 
tion is  arranged  alphabetically  under  the  author,  by  its  own  title. 

Example 

Maeterlinck,  Maurice. 
Der  blaue  vogel. 

Maeterlinck,  Maurice. 
The  blue  bird. 

Maeterlinck,  Maurice. 
Death. 

Maeterlinck,  Maurice. 

Life  of  the  bee. 
Maeterlinck,  Maurice. 

Monna  Vanna. 
Maeterlinck,  Maurice. 

La  mort. 
Maeterlinck,  Maurice. 

L'oiseau  bleu. 
Maeterlinck,  Maurice. 

La  vie  des  abeilles. 

If  titles  are  exactly  the  same  for  a  book  in  a  foreign  language  and 
for  its  English  translation,  or,  for  an  English  book  and  its  foreign 
translation,  file  English  title  first. 

Translator.    Sec  Author  arrangement. 

Transposed  subject  headings.    See  Subject  (as  subhead). 

Umlaut. 

a,  o,  ii,  in  German  to  be  considered  a,  o,  u. 

a,  a,  se,  6,  0,  in  Danish  and  Swedish  to  be  considered  a,  o. 

If  two  names  are  spelled  exactly  alike  except  for  the  umlaut,  arrange 
by  the  forenames. 

Example 

Muller,  Heinrich.  Miiller,  Heinrich. 

Miiller,  Johann.  Muller,  Johann. 

When  written  oe,  ae,  ue,  use  both  letters  in  filing. 

Example 

Goethe.  Hueffer. 

Gold.  Huffman. 


RULES  FOR  FILING  CARDS  31 

United  States.    See  Place  (country,  state,  city.) 

Wagner,  Richard. 

Arrange  entries  in  the  following  order. 

1.  General  writings,  not  including  autobiography  or  correspond- 
ence, in  one  alphabet. 

2.  Opera  scores  arranged  alphabetically. 

3.  Opera  texts,  including  librettos  and  works  about  separate  operas, 
arranged  alphabetically.  Under  each  opera  arrange  first  text  of  opera, 
then  works  about  it. 

4.  Criticism  of  works  arranged  alphabetically  by  name  of  author 
of  book.  * 

5.  Stories  of  the  operas  taken  collectively,  in  one  alphabet,  ar- 
ranged by  name  of  author  of  book. 

6.  Biography  of  Wagner.  In  this  arrangement  all  autobiography 
is  filed  first,  followed  by  lives  of  Wagner,  arranged  secondarily  by  the 
author  of  book. 

Example 

1.  Wagner,  Richard. 

Die  kunst  und  die  revolution. 

Wagner,  Richard. 
Oper  und  drama. 

2.  Wagner,  Richard. 

Lohengrin  (score). 

Wagner,  Richard. 
Parsifal  (score). 

Wagner,  Richard. 

Tristan  and  Isolde  (score). 

3.  Wagner,  Richard.  \j,  ,  ,  , 

Lohengrin  (text).  "  '  '„•  ;'  '._- 

Wagner,  Richard.  .         -  • 

Lohengrin  (criticism).  *      '     ' 

Wagner,  Richard. 
Parsifal  (text). 

Wagner,  Richard. 

Parsifal  (criticism). 


32  CARNEGIE  LIBRARY  OF  PITTSBURGH 

Wagner,  Richard — continued. 

4.  Wagner,  Richard. 

Gautier,  Judith. 

Wagner  and  his  poetical  work. 

Wagner,  Richard. 
Krehbiel,  H.  E. 

Studies  in  the  Wagnerian  drama. 

Wagner,  Richard. 
Newman,  Ernest. 
Study  of  Wagner. 

5.  Wagner,  Richard. 

Barber,  Grace  Edson. 
Wagner  opera  stories. 

Wagner,  Richard. 
Frost,  W.  H. 

Wagner  story  book. 

Wagner,  Richard. 
McSpadden,  J.  W. 

Stories  from  Wagner. 

6.  Wagner,  Richard,  &  Liszt,  Franz. 

Correspondence. 

Wagner,  Richard. 
Family  letters. 

Wagner,  Richard. 
Mein  leben. 

Wagner,  Richard. 

Chamberlain,  H.  C. 
Richard  Wagner. 

Wagner,  Richard. 
Finck,  H.  T. 

Wagner  and  his  works. 

Wagner,  Richard. 
Muncker,  Franz. 
Richard  Wagner. 


Gaylamount       ^ 
Pamphlet 
Binder 

Gaylord  Bros.,  Inc. 

Stockton,  Calif. 
T.M.  Reg.  U.S.  Pat.  on 


THE  UNIVERSITY  OF  CALIFORNIA  LIBRARY 


